Saturday, April 17, 2010

Thoughts on Delicious

As I keep messing around with Delicious, I'm finding more aspects of it that I like. I believe it was Sarah E that said she was trying to use the inbox. I checked that out, and while I do wish you could send a bit of a message (if you can, I haven't figured it out), you can send bookmarks right to individual users. If the person uses Delicious, this is a great way to do things. If you send it to their email, then there are extra steps for them to get it to Delicious. If you send it right IN Delicious, they just have to add it.

However, that said, if someone does NOT have Delicious, I just noticed a "send" tab when I was tagging a link in Delicious. It offers options to email the link to someone, or post it to your Twitter account. These are nice options to have right in the Delicious program itself.

Also, in my network "friend" list, I see that it has sections and flags to denote who you are following, who is following you, and whether you are following each other. It's kind of nice to know those separations, and have a visual cue that someone is not seeing your link list, in case you specifically want them to. And, there is the option to make links private for yourself or hide them from some people, which can also be a bonus.

I may just have to make a personal account for Delicious and start transferring my long, jumbled, and untagged list of firefox bookmarks over there.

Also, for students, I see this as making things easier for them working between home and school. They can get online for a few minutes in one place, and have the sources that they found available in the other class. In addition, so often students are working on multiple projects at one time, this would be a great way for them to have one location to save links in, yet be able to tag them for the appropriate class. They don't need 4 different link locations, but can have one list and search it by "history project," "english project," etc. And if it's a group project, they can subscribe to each other's feeds, or share links between each other, which definitely helps to promote the 21st century skills of networking and collaboration.

2 comments:

  1. I enjoyed reading about the detailed features you listed in your description of the Delicious tool! I agree with you that students would benefit from this bookmarking device for research reports and projects. They can organize their information using this tool and also highlight and cite information using "post-its" to let other students know about the most important information.

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  2. In addition to sharing bookmarks with each other, you can actually create a URL that links to a specific set of bookmarks. I find this really useful when linking to bookmarks for a project or class. If you go to D2L, I put the bookmarks with the tags "uwwlibmedia" and "web2.0" as a link in the menu bar so you can easily see what others have tagged. You could do something like this on your class webpage or on the library's webpage.

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